Coptic Synaxarium
The Eighteenth Day of the Blessed Month of Misra
Misra 18
Departure of St. Alexander, Patriarch
of Constantinople
On this day, of the year 340 A.D. the
saint Abba Alexander, Patriarch of the city of Constantinople, departed.
He was an honorable saint who suffered many hardships from the followers
of Arius. When St. Athanasius the Apostolic, the twentieth Pope of Alexandria,
renewed the excommunication of Arius, he went to Constantinople. Arius
complained to Emperor Constantius, Son of the righteous Emperor Constantine,
about St. Athanasius' conduct against him. When the emperor refused his
petition, Arius asked the emperor to instruct Abba Alexander to accept
him in the communion of the church. The emperor sent to this father saying,
"Athanasius had defied us because he did not accept Arius, and you know
that we appointed you to this position, so you must not transgress our
command. Make my heart glad, and reinstate Arius." St. Alexander replied
saying, "The church does not accept him for he does not worship the Holy
Trinity." The Emperor said, "Arius had confessed his faith in the Holy
Trinity before me and that the Son is of one essence with the Father."
Then the saint answered, "If Arius had confessed that, let him write his
confession by his own hand." The emperor brought Arius and he wrote down
the faith with his own hand, contrary to what he had in his heart. Then
the emperor made him swear on the Holy Bible that was his faith, but he
swore falsely.
The emperor said to Abba
Alexander, "What do you have against him now, since he has written his
faith with his own hand, and taken an oath on the Holy Bible." Abba Alexander
replied, "Pope Athanasius renewed the excommunication of Arius, which was
signed by your father, Emperor Constantine along with the three hundred
and eighteen fathers, and expelled him and all his followers from Alexandria.
Wait for one week, and if nothing happens to him during this week, then
his profession of faith is sincere, and his oath is righteous. Then I will
receive him in the communion of the church." The emperor agreed to his
request. When the patriarch went back to his church, he commanded his congregation
to fast, along with him, for seven days and pray to God that He might save
His church from the sin of Arius. After the week ended, and on the eve
of Sunday, the heretics took Arius and started strolling with him in the
streets of the city rejoicing that their leader would be accepted in the
church. In the morning, Arius went to the church and sat down with the
priests in front of the altar. Then Abba Alexander entered the church,
being sad, and not knowing what to do. When he started the liturgy, Arius
felt a colic and had to run to the washroom, where his bowels poured out
of his body. When Arius delayed in returning, his followers went to the
washroom, found him dead, and they were ashamed. The faithful glorified
the Lord Christ, Who does not forsake His church. The emperor was amazed
at that, and realized that Arius was lying in his writing and in his oath.
He also perceived the holiness of Abba Alexander, the truthfulness of his
faith, and the erroneous belief of Arius. He glorified the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit, and confessed publicly that the Trinity is one
in essence. This Father having completed his life in a good course, and
arrived at a good old age, departed in peace.
May his prayers be with us. Amen.
Martyrdom of St. Eudaemon, of Armant (El-Armanti)
On this day also, St. Eudaemon
(Wadamon), of the city of Armant (El-Armanti), was martyred. One day, he
had visitors in his house, who were heathen, and they were saying to each
other, "We have heard that a lady arrived to the city of Ashmonain carrying
a young Child who resembled the children of Kings." Others asked, "Did
this Child come to the land of Egypt?" and everyone was talking about this
Child. After the guests had left, Eudaemon rose up, rode his donkey and
went to the city of Ashmonain. When he arrived, he saw the Child Jesus
with his mother Mariam (Mary), and he kneeled before Him. As the Child
saw what Eudaemon had done, the Child smiled and said, "Peace be with you
Eudaemon, you have labored and come here in person to assert what you have
heard from your guests about Me. Thence I will stay in your home, which
will be a house for Me forever." St. Eudaemon marvelled and said, "O My
Lord I wish that You will come and live in my house and I will be Your
servant forever." The Child replied saying, "Your home will be a house
for Me and My mother forever. When you return home and the heathen hear
that you came to Me, they will be sorry and hurt, and they will shed your
blood in your house. Don't be afraid because I will receive you in My heavenly
kingdom forever, the place of perpetual joy, which has no end. You will
be the first martyr in Upper Egypt."
Then Eudaemon kneeled
down before the Lord Christ, the Child, Who blessed him, then he returned
to his home. Upon Eudaemon's return to Armant, the heathen heard about
his arrival. The news that Eudaemon had visited the Child Jesus, spread
in the city. They came to him in haste asking, "Is all that they say about
you true?" Eudaemon replied saying, "Yes, I went to the Lord Christ, Who
blessed me and said, 'I am coming to dwell in your house with My mother,
forever.'" The heathens shouted out as one person, drew their swords, and
killed him. Thus, Eudaemon received the crown of martyrdom on this day.
When paganism was abolished, and Christianity spread in the land, the Christians
converted the house of St. Eudaemon into a church, and named it after St.
Mary and her Son, to Whom is the everlasting Glory. This church is the
one called El-Gishouna, which means "the church of the living," in the
outskirts of Armant, which still exists now.
May God have mercy on us through the intercession of our Lady the
Virgin Mary, the Mother of God, and the intercession of the martyr Eudaemon,
the pure faithful, and Glory be to our God forever. Amen.